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A Diamond In The Snow
‘No,’ he said. ‘Dad, there’s an easy solution to all this.’
Alan frowned. ‘What?’
‘Let me take over Weatherby’s from you,’ Sam said. ‘You’ve more than earned some time off to play golf and have weekends away with Mum. And I’ve spent the last six years in the City, learning the ropes. You’ll be leaving the business in safe hands.’
Alan shook his head. ‘The fund you manage is high risk. It’s extreme. Half of our clients would look at your record, panic, and find themselves another stockbroker.’
‘Apart from the fact that any strategy I recommended to a client would depend on the client’s attitude towards risk,’ Sam said dryly, ‘I’m good at my job, Dad. That’s why they promoted me.’
‘You take risks,’ Alan repeated.
‘Calculated ones.’
‘You’re still young and reckless.’
‘I’m twenty-seven,’ Sam said, ‘and I’m not reckless.’
‘Prove it.’
Sam frowned. ‘How?’
‘Take an ordinary job for three months.’
‘How’s that going to prove anything?’ Sam asked, mystified.
‘It’ll show me that you can connect to people in the real word. That you can see that actions have consequences.’
‘Dad, I already do connect to people in the real world, and of course I know that actions have consequences,’ Sam said, frowning.
‘Take an ordinary job,’ Alan repeated. ‘Show me that you can take directions and listen to other people.’
Which had absolutely nothing to do with running a firm of stockbrokers, Sam thought.
Either he’d accidentally spoken aloud, or his doubts showed on his face, because Alan said softly, ‘It’s got everything to do with running the firm. It’s about listening and relating to people—staff as well as clients. In London, you live in a bubble. You’re insulated from your investors and everyone you mix with is like you—young, well-off and living in the fast lane.’
Most people would consider that Samuel Weatherby had made a success of his career. He’d got a job on his own merits after university rather than expecting to be a shoo-in at his father’s business, he’d shown an aptitude for fund management and he’d been promoted quickly. But it sounded as if his father thought his job was worthless, and that hurt.
‘Not all,’ he said. ‘There’s Jude.’ His best friend was an actor with a growing reputation on the stage, and people were talking about him in terms of being the Olivier of his generation.
‘Right now,’ Alan said, ‘I don’t think you’re settled enough to work at Weatherby’s. If I let you take over from me now, it’d be more stressful than running it myself.’
Sam reminded himself that his father had had a rough week—a mini-stroke that had brought him face to face with the idea of getting old or even dying, the prospect of having to change all the things he liked most about his lifestyle and feeling stuck at home when he wanted to be doing what he always did. Right now, Alan was simply lashing out at the nearest target—his son.
‘Take an ordinary job for three months, and if you can do that then I’ll be happy that I’m leaving the family business in safe hands,’ Alan said.
Sam could tell his father to forget it and stomp off back to London in a huff. But the fear he’d seen in his mother’s eyes stopped him. Alan was at risk of another mini-stroke or even a full-blown one. Sam couldn’t stand by and watch his father drive himself into an early grave. ‘So what sort of job do you have in mind, Dad?’ he asked.
‘Actually, now you mention it, there is one,’ Alan said. ‘Working for one of my clients. Nice chap. He owns a stately home. A building problem’s cropped up in the last week or so and they need to raise some money. He was talking to me about cashing in some investments, but as the market’s just dipped I think now’s not a good time.’
Raising money. Sam was very, very good at turning small funds into big ones. But he had a feeling that this particular client wouldn’t be comfortable with the high-risk strategy he’d need to adopt to do that.
‘The job would be voluntary,’ Alan continued, ‘because they can’t afford to pay anyone. You’d be helping to organise the fundraising events.’
Sam couldn’t help smiling.
‘What’s so funny?’ Alan demanded.
‘You wanted me to get an ordinary job. I thought you meant something in retail or a call centre. Ordinary people don’t own stately homes, Dad.’
‘No,’ Alan said crisply, ‘but their visitors and staff are ordinary and you’ll be interacting with them.’
‘A voluntary job.’ Three months with no salary. But he’d be on garden leave; and even if that didn’t work out, he’d managed his personal investments well enough that he could easily afford to take a sabbatical. Jude was coming back from a tour in rep to a three-month run in the West End and could stay at Sam’s flat; it would save Jude having to find a landlady who was happy to have a theatrical lodger, and in return Sam would know that his flat was in safe hands. ‘OK. I’ll talk to him and see if I’ll be a good fit.’
‘Good.’ Alan paused. ‘The botanical gardens and afternoon tea, you said.’
‘One scone, no cream, and no sugar in your tea,’ Sam said.
Alan rolled his eyes. ‘You’re as bossy as your mother.’
Sam grinned. ‘More like I’m as bossy as you, Dad.’
‘You might have a point,’ Alan allowed. ‘Go and tell your mother to get ready. I’ll have a word with Patrick and see if we can line up a chat for tomorrow.’
And Sam would have a quiet chat with his boss. This was time for payback. He wasn’t thrilled with the idea of working in a stately home for three months, but if that was what it took to make sure his father stayed healthy and happy, he’d do it.
CHAPTER TWO
‘SO WHAT DO you actually know about this man who wants to come and help us, Dad?’ Victoria asked.
‘He’s my stockbroker’s son,’ Patrick said.
‘So is he taking a gap year? Is his degree going to be in history?’
‘I don’t know,’ Patrick said, ‘but Alan said he’s very keen.’
He must be, Victoria thought, to arrange an interview for nine o’clock on a Sunday morning. ‘Did you want to interview him, then, as you know his father?’
Patrick smiled and patted her shoulder. ‘Absolutely not, darling. You’re the one he’s going to be working with. It needs to be your decision.’
‘If you change your mind, we’ll be in the office,’ Victoria said.
It was a shame her father had been so vague about the details; he hadn’t even asked for a rudimentary CV. Then again, her father came from the era of the gentleman’s agreement and he didn’t like paperwork. Hopefully the lad would bring his exam certificates with him and she’d be able to get an idea of his education so far and his interests, and whether he’d be the right one to help her.
Part of her thought there was something rude and arrogant about interviewing a volunteer for a job you weren’t actually paying them to do; on the other hand, if he was hopeless, he’d be more of a hindrance than a help because she’d have to double-check everything he did. Plus, even though he wasn’t being paid, he was getting valuable experience that might help him with applications for further study or a job in the heritage sector.
‘Come on, Humphrey,’ she said to her fox-red Labrador, who was curled up on the chair where he knew he wasn’t supposed to be. ‘Let’s go for a walk.’ It was more to clear her head before the interview than anything else. It felt as if she’d spent weeks wrestling with forms.
At the W-word, the Labrador sprang off the chair, wagged his tail and followed her into the garden.
Growing up at Chiverton had been such a privilege. Victoria loved everything about the place, from the mellow golden stone it was built from, through to the big sash windows that surrounded the huge Venetian window at the back of the house, through to the pedimented portico at the front. She loved the gardens that sprawled around the house and were full of daffodils and bluebells in the spring, the way the sunrise was reflected in the lake, and the formal knot garden at the side full of box and lavender. And most of all she loved the ballroom.
Her plans were going to require a lot of organisational skills. But hopefully Samuel Weatherby would fall in love with the place, too, and support her fundraising effort.
Humphrey headed straight for the lake as soon as they were outside and was already swimming after the ducks before she had a chance to call him back.
‘I’m banishing you to the kitchen,’ she said when he finally came out of the lake and shook the water from his coat. ‘I don’t want you scaring off our volunteer.’ Unless he was unsuitable—and then perhaps she could offer him a coffee in the kitchen, and Humphrey would leap all over their volunteer and make him withdraw his offer of help.
She could imagine Lizzie’s soft giggle and, ‘But, Tori, that’s so naughty!’ Lizzie was one of the two people Victoria had ever allowed to shorten her name.
She shook herself. She didn’t have time for sentiment right now. She needed to be businesslike and sort out her questions for her impending visitor to make sure he had the qualities she needed. Someone efficient and calm, who could use his initiative, drive a hard bargain, and not mind mucking in and getting his hands dirty. And definitely not someone clumsy.
In return, he’d get experience on his CV. She tried not to feel guilty about the lack of a salary. So many internships nowadays were unpaid. Besides, as her mother had suggested, they could offer him accommodation and meals; and Victoria could always buy him some books for his course. Textbooks cost an arm and a leg.
She changed into her business suit and had just finished dealing with an email when the landline in her office shrilled. She picked up the phone. ‘Victoria Hamilton.’
‘May I speak to Mr Hamilton, please? It’s Samuel Weatherby. I believe he’s expecting me.’
He sounded confident, which was probably a good thing. ‘Actually,’ she said, ‘you’re seeing me. I’m his daughter and I run the house.’ She wasn’t going to give him a hard time about asking for the wrong person. The message had probably become garbled between their fathers.
‘My apologies, Ms Hamilton,’ he said.
He was quick to recover, at any rate, she thought. ‘I assume, as you’re ringing me, you’re at the gate?’
‘Yes. I parked in the visitor car park. Is that OK, or do I need to move my car?’
‘It’s fine. I’ll come and let you in,’ she said.
Humphrey whined at the door as she walked past.
‘You are not coming with me and jumping all over our poor student,’ Victoria told him, but her tone was soft. ‘I’ll take you for another run later.’
The house was gorgeous, Samuel thought as he walked down the gravelled drive. The equal of any London townhouse, with those huge windows and perfect proportions. The house was clearly well cared for; there was no evidence of it being some mouldering pile with broken windows and damaged stonework, and what he could see of the gardens was neat and tidy.
He paused to read the visitor information board. So the Hamilton family had lived here for two hundred and fifty years. From the woodcut on the board, the place had barely changed in that time—at least, on the outside. Obviously running water, electricity and some form of heating had been installed.
Despite the fact that the house was in the middle of nowhere and he was used to living and working in the centre of London, a few minutes away from everything, there was something about the place that drew him. He could definitely work here for three months, if it would help keep his father happy and healthy.
All he had to do was to convince Patrick Hamilton that he was the man for the job. It would’ve been helpful if his father had given him a bit more information about what the job actually entailed, so he could’ve crafted a CV to suit. As it was, he’d have to make do with his current CV—and hope that Patrick didn’t look too closely at it or panic about the hedge fund management stuff.
He glanced at his watch. Five minutes early. He could either kick his heels out here, on the wrong side of a locked gate, or he could get this thing started.
He took his phone from his pocket. Despite this place being in the middle of nowhere, it had a decent signal, to his relief. He called the number his father had given him.
‘Victoria Hamilton,’ a crisp voice said.
Patrick’s wife or daughter, Sam presumed. He couldn’t quite gauge her age from her voice. ‘May I speak to Mr Hamilton, please? It’s Samuel Weatherby. I believe he’s expecting me.’
‘Actually,’ she corrected, ‘you’re seeing me. I’m his daughter and I run the house.’
Something his father had definitely neglected to tell him. Alarm bells rang in Sam’s head. Please don’t let this be some elaborate ruse on his father’s part to fix him up with someone he considered a suitable partner. Sam didn’t want a partner. He was quite happy with his life just the way it was, thank you.
Then again, brooding over your own mortality probably meant you didn’t pay as much attention to detail as usual. And Sam wanted this job. He’d give his father the benefit of the doubt. ‘My apologies, Ms Hamilton.’
‘I assume, as you’re ringing me, you’re at the gate?’
‘Yes. I parked in the visitor car park. Is that OK, or do I need to move my car?’
‘It’s fine. I’ll come and let you in,’ she said.
He ended the call, and a couple of minutes later a woman came walking round the corner.
She was wearing a well-cut dark business suit and low-heeled shoes. Her dark hair was woven into a severe French pleat, and she wore the bare minimum of make-up. Sam couldn’t quite sum her up: she dressed like a woman in her forties, but her skin was unlined enough for her to be around his own age.
‘Sorry to keep you waiting, Mr Weatherby.’ She tapped a code into the keypad, opened the gate and held out her hand to shake his.
Formal, too. OK. He’d let himself be guided by her.
Her handshake was completely businesslike, firm enough to warn him that she wasn’t a pushover and yet she wasn’t trying to prove that she was physically as strong as a man.
‘Welcome to Chiverton Hall, Mr Weatherby.’
‘Sam,’ he said. Though he noticed that she didn’t ask him to call her by her own first name.
‘I’m afraid my father hasn’t told me much about you, other than that you’re interested in a voluntary job here for the next three months—so I assume that either you’re a mature student, or you’re changing career and you’re looking for some experience to help with that.’
She thought he was a student? Then again, he’d been expecting to deal with her father. There had definitely been some crossed wires. ‘I’m changing career,’ he said. Which was true: just not the whole truth.
‘Did you bring your CV with you?’
‘No.’ Which had been stupid of him. ‘But I can access it on my phone and email it over to you.’
‘Thank you. That would be useful.’ Her smile was kind, and made it clear she thought he wasn’t up to the job.
This was ridiculous. Why should he have to prove himself to a woman he’d never met before, for a temporary and voluntary post?
Though, according to his father, they needed help. Having someone clueless who’d need to take up lots of her time for training was the last thing she needed. In her shoes, he’d be the same—wanting someone capable.
‘Let me show you round the house,’ she said, ‘and you can tell me what you want to get out of a three-month placement.’
Proof for his father that he could take direction and deal with ordinary people. If he told her that, she’d run a mile. And he needed to get this job, so he could stay here to keep an eye on his parents. ‘Experience,’ he said instead.
‘Of conservation work or management?’
‘Possibly both.’ He felt ridiculously underprepared. He’d expected a casual chat with a friend of his father’s, and an immediate offer to start work there the next week. What an arrogant idiot he was. Maybe his father had a point. To give himself thinking time, he asked, ‘What does the job actually entail?’
She blew out a breath. ‘Background: we do an annual survey to check on the condition of our textiles and see what work we need to do over the winter.’
He assumed this was standard practice in the heritage sector.
‘My surveyor found mould in the silk hangings in the ballroom. It’s going to cost a lot to fix, so we’re applying for heritage grants and we’re also running some fundraising events.’
‘So where do I come in?’ he asked.
‘That depends on your skill set.’
Good answer. Victoria Hamilton was definitely one of the sharper tools in the box.
‘If you’re good at website design, I need to update our website with information about the ballroom restoration and its progress. If you’re good at figures, then budgeting and cost control would be a help. If you’ve managed events, then I’d want you to help to set up the programme and run them.’
Help to, he noticed. She clearly had no intention of giving up control. ‘Who fills the gaps?’ he asked.
‘Me.’
‘That’s quite a wide range of skills.’
She shrugged. ‘I started helping with the house as soon as I was old enough. And Dad’s gradually been passing his responsibilities to me. I’ve been in charge of running the house for two years. You have to be adaptable so you can meet any challenge life throws up. In the heritage sector, every day is different.’
Her father believed in her, whereas his didn’t trust him. Part of him envied her. But that wasn’t why he was here.
‘I’ll give you the short version of the house tour,’ she said.
Stately homes had never really been Sam’s thing. He remembered being taken to them when he was young, but he’d been bored and restless until it was time to run around in the parkland or, even better, a children’s play area. But he needed to look enthusiastic right now, if he was to stand any chance of getting this job. ‘I’d love to see around,’ he fibbed.
She led him round to the front. ‘The entrance hall is the first room people would see when they visited, so it needed to look impressive.’
Hence the chandelier, the stunning black and white marble floor, the artwork and the huge curving double staircase. He could imagine women walking down the staircase, with the trains of their dresses sweeping down behind them; and he made a mental note to ask Victoria whether any of her events involved people in period dress—because that was something he could help with, through Jude.
There were plenty of portraits on the walls; he assumed most of them were of Hamilton ancestors.
‘Once they’d been impressed by the entrance hall—and obviously they’d focus on the plasterwork on the ceiling, not the chandelier—visitors would go up the staircase and into the salon,’ she said.
Again, the room was lavishly decorated, with rich carpets and gilt-framed paintings.
‘If you were close to the family, you’d go into the withdrawing room,’ she said.
Another sumptuous room.
‘Closer still, and you’d be invited to the bedroom.’
He couldn’t help raising his eyebrows at her.
She didn’t even crack a smile, just earnestly explained to him, ‘They didn’t just dress and sleep here. A lot of business was conducted in the private rooms.’
‘Uh-huh.’ It was all about money, not sex, then.
‘And if you were really, really close, you’d be invited into the closet. This one was remodelled as a dressing room in the mid-eighteen-hundreds, but originally it was the closet.’ She indicated a small, plain room.
He managed to stop himself making a witty remark about closets. Mainly because he didn’t think she’d find it funny. Victoria Hamilton was the most serious and earnest woman he’d ever met. ‘Surely the more important your guest, the posher the room you’d use?’
‘No. The public rooms meant everyone could hear what you were talking about. Nowadays it’d be the equivalent of, say, video-calling your bank manager about your overdraft on speakerphone in the middle of a crowded coffee shop. The more privacy you wanted, the smaller the room and the smaller the number of people who could overhear you and gossip. Even the servants couldn’t overhear things in the closet.’
‘Got you. So that’s where you’d plot your business deals?’
‘Or revolutions, or marriage-brokering.’
He followed her back to the salon.
‘Then we have the Long Gallery—it runs the whole length of the house. When it was too cold and wet to walk in the gardens, they’d walk here. Mainly just promenading up and down, looking at the pictures or through the windows at the garden. It’s a good place to think.’
She flushed slightly then, and Sam realised she’d accidentally told him something personal. When Victoria Hamilton needed to think, she paced. Here.
‘Next door, in the ballroom, they’d hold musical soirées. Sometimes it was a piano recital, sometimes there would be singing, and sometimes they’d have a string quartet for a ball.’
‘The room where you have the mould problem,’ he remembered. Was she blinking away tears? Crying over a room?
‘We’ve tested the air and it’s safe for visitors—you don’t need a mask or anything,’ she said.
He wasn’t going to pretend he knew much about mould, other than the black stuff that had crept across the ceiling of his friends’ houses during his student days. So he simply followed her through.
‘Oh.’ It wasn’t quite what he’d expected. The walls, curtains and upholstery were all cream and duck-egg-blue; there was a thick rug in the centre of the room, a grand piano, and chairs and chaises-longue laid out along the walls. There were mirrors on all the walls, reflecting the light from the windows and the chandelier.
‘It’s not a huge ballroom,’ she said. ‘Big enough for about fifty, and they’d have supper downstairs in the dining room or they’d lay out a standing supper in the Long Gallery.’
‘Is it ever used as a ballroom now?’ he asked, intrigued.
‘Not for years, but I’m planning to use it as part of the fundraising. It’ll be a Christmas ball, with everyone wearing Regency dress, and dinner will be a proper Regency ball supper.’
Her dark eyes were bright, and it was the first time Sam had seen her really animated. It shocked him to realise how gorgeous she was, when she wasn’t being earnest. When she was talking about something she really loved, she glowed.
‘That all sounds fun.’
‘We’ll attract fans of Austen and the Regency,’ she said. ‘And that’ll be the theme for the week. Craft workshops and decking the house out for Christmas, so visitors can feel part of the past.’
Feel part of the past. Now Sam understood her. This was clearly her favourite room in the house, and she must be devastated by the fact that this was the room with the problem. Now he could see why she’d blinked away tears.
‘Forgive me for being dense, but I can’t see any signs of mould,’ he said. ‘Isn’t it usually black and on the ceiling?’
‘This is white and it’s behind the mirror that usually goes over the mantelpiece, but it’s just come to the edge. You can see it under ultraviolet light.’ She sighed. ‘We’ll have to take the hangings down to dry them out and then make sure we get all the spores.’
He walked over to the mantelpiece and put his fingers to the wall, and she winced visibly.
‘Don’t touch because of the mould?’ he asked.
‘Don’t touch because of the oils on your fingertips, which will damage the silk,’ she corrected.
‘So this isn’t wallpaper?’
‘It’s silk,’ she said, ‘though it’s hung as wallpaper.’
‘Pasted to the wall?’
‘Hung on wooden battens,’ she said. ‘I’m guessing you haven’t covered the care of textiles or paper on your course, then.’
He was going to have to come clean about this—at least partially. ‘Now you’ve shown me round, why don’t we talk about the job?’ he asked.
‘OK.’ She led him through the house without commenting, but he could tell that she didn’t take her surroundings for granted, she loved the place. It was her passion—just as he’d thought that fund management was his, but meeting Victoria had shown him that his feelings didn’t even come close. Otherwise why would he feel perfectly fine about dropping everything to take over from his father?